Elixir v1.8.0-rc.1 Keyword View Source

A set of functions for working with keywords.

A keyword is a list of two-element tuples where the first element of the tuple is an atom and the second element can be any value.

For example, the following is a keyword list:

[{:exit_on_close, true}, {:active, :once}, {:packet_size, 1024}]

Elixir provides a special and more concise syntax for keyword lists that looks like this:

[exit_on_close: true, active: :once, packet_size: 1024]

This is also the syntax that Elixir uses to inspect keyword lists:

iex> [{:active, :once}]
[active: :once]

The two syntaxes are completely equivalent. Like atoms, keywords must be composed of Unicode characters such as letters, numbers, underscore, and @. If the keyword has a character that does not belong to the category above, such as spaces, you can wrap it in quotes:

iex> ["exit on close": true]
["exit on close": true]

Wrapping a keyword in quotes does not make it a string. Keywords are always atoms. If you use quotes when all characters are a valid part of a keyword without quotes, Elixir will warn.

Note that when keyword lists are passed as the last argument to a function, if the short-hand syntax is used then the square brackets around the keyword list can be omitted as well. For example, the following:

String.split("1-0", "-", trim: true, parts: 2)

is equivalent to:

String.split("1-0", "-", [trim: true, parts: 2])

A keyword may have duplicated keys so it is not strictly a key-value store. However most of the functions in this module behave exactly as a dictionary so they work similarly to the functions you would find in the Map module.

For example, Keyword.get/3 will get the first entry matching the given key, regardless if duplicated entries exist. Similarly, Keyword.put/3 and Keyword.delete/3 ensure all duplicated entries for a given key are removed when invoked. Note that operations that require keys to be found in the keyword list (like Keyword.get/3) need to traverse the list in order to find keys, so these operations may be slower than their map counterparts.

A handful of functions exist to handle duplicated keys, in particular, Enum.into/2 allows creating new keywords without removing duplicated keys, get_values/2 returns all values for a given key and delete_first/2 deletes just one of the existing entries.

The functions in Keyword do not guarantee any property when it comes to ordering. However, since a keyword list is simply a list, all the operations defined in Enum and List can be applied too, especially when ordering is required.

Link to this section Summary

Functions

Deletes the entries in the keyword list for a specific key.

Deletes the entries in the keyword list for a key with value.

Deletes the first entry in the keyword list for a specific key.

Drops the given keys from the keyword list.

Checks if two keywords are equal.

Fetches the value for a specific key and returns it in a tuple.

Fetches the value for specific key.

Gets the value for a specific key.

Gets the value from key and updates it, all in one pass.

Gets the value from key and updates it. Raises if there is no key.

Gets the value for a specific key.

Gets all values for a specific key.

Returns whether a given key exists in the given keywords.

Returns all keys from the keyword list.

Returns true if term is a keyword list; otherwise returns false.

Merges two keyword lists into one.

Merges two keyword lists into one.

Returns an empty keyword list, i.e. an empty list.

Creates a keyword from an enumerable.

Creates a keyword from an enumerable via the transformation function.

Returns and removes all values associated with key in the keyword list.

Returns and removes the first value associated with key in the keyword list.

Lazily returns and removes all values associated with key in the keyword list.

Puts the given value under key.

Puts the given value under key unless the entry key already exists.

Evaluates fun and puts the result under key in keyword list unless key is already present.

Alters the value stored under key to value, but only if the entry key already exists in keywords.

Takes all entries corresponding to the given keys and extracts them into a separate keyword list.

Takes all entries corresponding to the given keys and returns them in a new keyword list.

Returns the keyword list itself.

Updates the key in keywords with the given function.

Updates the key with the given function.

Returns all values from the keyword list.

Link to this section Types

Specs

key() :: atom()

Specs

t() :: [{key(), value()}]

Specs

t(value) :: [{key(), value}]

Specs

value() :: any()

Link to this section Functions

Specs

delete(t(), key()) :: t()

Deletes the entries in the keyword list for a specific key.

If the key does not exist, returns the keyword list unchanged. Use delete_first/2 to delete just the first entry in case of duplicated keys.

Examples

iex> Keyword.delete([a: 1, b: 2], :a)
[b: 2]
iex> Keyword.delete([a: 1, b: 2, a: 3], :a)
[b: 2]
iex> Keyword.delete([b: 2], :a)
[b: 2]
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delete(keywords, key, value)

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Specs

delete(t(), key(), value()) :: t()

Deletes the entries in the keyword list for a key with value.

If no key with value exists, returns the keyword list unchanged.

Examples

iex> Keyword.delete([a: 1, b: 2], :a, 1)
[b: 2]
iex> Keyword.delete([a: 1, b: 2, a: 3], :a, 3)
[a: 1, b: 2]
iex> Keyword.delete([a: 1], :a, 5)
[a: 1]
iex> Keyword.delete([a: 1], :b, 5)
[a: 1]
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delete_first(keywords, key)

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Specs

delete_first(t(), key()) :: t()

Deletes the first entry in the keyword list for a specific key.

If the key does not exist, returns the keyword list unchanged.

Examples

iex> Keyword.delete_first([a: 1, b: 2, a: 3], :a)
[b: 2, a: 3]
iex> Keyword.delete_first([b: 2], :a)
[b: 2]

Specs

drop(t(), [key()]) :: t()

Drops the given keys from the keyword list.

Duplicated keys are preserved in the new keyword list.

Examples

iex> Keyword.drop([a: 1, b: 2, c: 3], [:b, :d])
[a: 1, c: 3]
iex> Keyword.drop([a: 1, b: 2, b: 3, c: 3, a: 5], [:b, :d])
[a: 1, c: 3, a: 5]

Specs

equal?(t(), t()) :: boolean()

Checks if two keywords are equal.

Two keywords are considered to be equal if they contain the same keys and those keys contain the same values.

Examples

iex> Keyword.equal?([a: 1, b: 2], [b: 2, a: 1])
true
iex> Keyword.equal?([a: 1, b: 2], [b: 1, a: 2])
false
iex> Keyword.equal?([a: 1, b: 2, a: 3], [b: 2, a: 3, a: 1])
true

Specs

fetch(t(), key()) :: {:ok, value()} | :error

Fetches the value for a specific key and returns it in a tuple.

If the key does not exist, returns :error.

Examples

iex> Keyword.fetch([a: 1], :a)
{:ok, 1}
iex> Keyword.fetch([a: 1], :b)
:error

Specs

fetch!(t(), key()) :: value()

Fetches the value for specific key.

If key does not exist, a KeyError is raised.

Examples

iex> Keyword.fetch!([a: 1], :a)
1
iex> Keyword.fetch!([a: 1], :b)
** (KeyError) key :b not found in: [a: 1]
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get(keywords, key, default \\ nil)

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Specs

get(t(), key(), value()) :: value()

Gets the value for a specific key.

If key does not exist, return the default value (nil if no default value).

If duplicated entries exist, the first one is returned. Use get_values/2 to retrieve all entries.

Examples

iex> Keyword.get([], :a)
nil
iex> Keyword.get([a: 1], :a)
1
iex> Keyword.get([a: 1], :b)
nil
iex> Keyword.get([a: 1], :b, 3)
3

With duplicated keys:

iex> Keyword.get([a: 1, a: 2], :a, 3)
1
iex> Keyword.get([a: 1, a: 2], :b, 3)
3
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get_and_update(keywords, key, fun)

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Specs

get_and_update(t(), key(), (value() -> {get, value()} | :pop)) :: {get, t()}
when get: term()

Gets the value from key and updates it, all in one pass.

This fun argument receives the value of key (or nil if key is not present) and must return a two-element tuple: the "get" value (the retrieved value, which can be operated on before being returned) and the new value to be stored under key. The fun may also return :pop, implying the current value shall be removed from the keyword list and returned.

The returned value is a tuple with the "get" value returned by fun and a new keyword list with the updated value under key.

Examples

iex> Keyword.get_and_update([a: 1], :a, fn current_value ->
...>   {current_value, "new value!"}
...> end)
{1, [a: "new value!"]}

iex> Keyword.get_and_update([a: 1], :b, fn current_value ->
...>   {current_value, "new value!"}
...> end)
{nil, [b: "new value!", a: 1]}

iex> Keyword.get_and_update([a: 1], :a, fn _ -> :pop end)
{1, []}

iex> Keyword.get_and_update([a: 1], :b, fn _ -> :pop end)
{nil, [a: 1]}
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get_and_update!(keywords, key, fun)

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Specs

get_and_update!(t(), key(), (value() -> {get, value()})) :: {get, t()}
when get: term()

Gets the value from key and updates it. Raises if there is no key.

This fun argument receives the value of key and must return a two-element tuple: the "get" value (the retrieved value, which can be operated on before being returned) and the new value to be stored under key.

The returned value is a tuple with the "get" value returned by fun and a new keyword list with the updated value under key.

Examples

iex> Keyword.get_and_update!([a: 1], :a, fn current_value ->
...>   {current_value, "new value!"}
...> end)
{1, [a: "new value!"]}

iex> Keyword.get_and_update!([a: 1], :b, fn current_value ->
...>   {current_value, "new value!"}
...> end)
** (KeyError) key :b not found in: [a: 1]

iex> Keyword.get_and_update!([a: 1], :a, fn _ ->
...>   :pop
...> end)
{1, []}
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get_lazy(keywords, key, fun)

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Specs

get_lazy(t(), key(), (() -> value())) :: value()

Gets the value for a specific key.

If key does not exist, lazily evaluates fun and returns its result.

This is useful if the default value is very expensive to calculate or generally difficult to setup and teardown again.

If duplicated entries exist, the first one is returned. Use get_values/2 to retrieve all entries.

Examples

iex> keyword = [a: 1]
iex> fun = fn ->
...>   # some expensive operation here
...>   13
...> end
iex> Keyword.get_lazy(keyword, :a, fun)
1
iex> Keyword.get_lazy(keyword, :b, fun)
13
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get_values(keywords, key)

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Specs

get_values(t(), key()) :: [value()]

Gets all values for a specific key.

Examples

iex> Keyword.get_values([], :a)
[]
iex> Keyword.get_values([a: 1], :a)
[1]
iex> Keyword.get_values([a: 1, a: 2], :a)
[1, 2]

Specs

has_key?(t(), key()) :: boolean()

Returns whether a given key exists in the given keywords.

Examples

iex> Keyword.has_key?([a: 1], :a)
true
iex> Keyword.has_key?([a: 1], :b)
false

Specs

keys(t()) :: [key()]

Returns all keys from the keyword list.

Duplicated keys appear duplicated in the final list of keys.

Examples

iex> Keyword.keys(a: 1, b: 2)
[:a, :b]
iex> Keyword.keys(a: 1, b: 2, a: 3)
[:a, :b, :a]

Specs

keyword?(term()) :: boolean()

Returns true if term is a keyword list; otherwise returns false.

Examples

iex> Keyword.keyword?([])
true
iex> Keyword.keyword?(a: 1)
true
iex> Keyword.keyword?([{Foo, 1}])
true
iex> Keyword.keyword?([{}])
false
iex> Keyword.keyword?([:key])
false
iex> Keyword.keyword?(%{})
false
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merge(keywords1, keywords2)

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Specs

merge(t(), t()) :: t()

Merges two keyword lists into one.

All keys, including duplicated keys, given in keywords2 will be added to keywords1, overriding any existing one.

There are no guarantees about the order of keys in the returned keyword.

Examples

iex> Keyword.merge([a: 1, b: 2], [a: 3, d: 4])
[b: 2, a: 3, d: 4]

iex> Keyword.merge([a: 1, b: 2], [a: 3, d: 4, a: 5])
[b: 2, a: 3, d: 4, a: 5]

iex> Keyword.merge([a: 1], [2, 3])
** (ArgumentError) expected a keyword list as the second argument, got: [2, 3]
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merge(keywords1, keywords2, fun)

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Specs

merge(t(), t(), (key(), value(), value() -> value())) :: t()

Merges two keyword lists into one.

All keys, including duplicated keys, given in keywords2 will be added to keywords1. The given function will be invoked to solve conflicts.

If keywords2 has duplicate keys, the given function will be invoked for each matching pair in keywords1.

There are no guarantees about the order of keys in the returned keyword.

Examples

iex> Keyword.merge([a: 1, b: 2], [a: 3, d: 4], fn _k, v1, v2 ->
...>   v1 + v2
...> end)
[b: 2, a: 4, d: 4]

iex> Keyword.merge([a: 1, b: 2], [a: 3, d: 4, a: 5], fn :a, v1, v2 ->
...>   v1 + v2
...> end)
[b: 2, a: 4, d: 4, a: 5]

iex> Keyword.merge([a: 1, b: 2, a: 3], [a: 3, d: 4, a: 5], fn :a, v1, v2 ->
...>   v1 + v2
...> end)
[b: 2, a: 4, d: 4, a: 8]

iex> Keyword.merge([a: 1, b: 2], [:a, :b], fn :a, v1, v2 ->
...>   v1 + v2
...> end)
** (ArgumentError) expected a keyword list as the second argument, got: [:a, :b]

Specs

new() :: []

Returns an empty keyword list, i.e. an empty list.

Examples

iex> Keyword.new()
[]

Specs

new(Enum.t()) :: t()

Creates a keyword from an enumerable.

Duplicated entries are removed, the latest one prevails. Unlike Enum.into(enumerable, []), Keyword.new(enumerable) guarantees the keys are unique.

Examples

iex> Keyword.new([{:b, 1}, {:a, 2}])
[b: 1, a: 2]

iex> Keyword.new([{:a, 1}, {:a, 2}, {:a, 3}])
[a: 3]

Specs

new(Enum.t(), (term() -> {key(), value()})) :: t()

Creates a keyword from an enumerable via the transformation function.

Duplicated entries are removed, the latest one prevails. Unlike Enum.into(enumerable, [], fun), Keyword.new(enumerable, fun) guarantees the keys are unique.

Examples

iex> Keyword.new([:a, :b], fn x -> {x, x} end)
[a: :a, b: :b]
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pop(keywords, key, default \\ nil)

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Specs

pop(t(), key(), value()) :: {value(), t()}

Returns and removes all values associated with key in the keyword list.

All duplicated keys are removed. See pop_first/3 for removing only the first entry.

Examples

iex> Keyword.pop([a: 1], :a)
{1, []}
iex> Keyword.pop([a: 1], :b)
{nil, [a: 1]}
iex> Keyword.pop([a: 1], :b, 3)
{3, [a: 1]}
iex> Keyword.pop([a: 1, a: 2], :a)
{1, []}
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pop_first(keywords, key, default \\ nil)

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Specs

pop_first(t(), key(), value()) :: {value(), t()}

Returns and removes the first value associated with key in the keyword list.

Duplicated keys are not removed.

Examples

iex> Keyword.pop_first([a: 1], :a)
{1, []}
iex> Keyword.pop_first([a: 1], :b)
{nil, [a: 1]}
iex> Keyword.pop_first([a: 1], :b, 3)
{3, [a: 1]}
iex> Keyword.pop_first([a: 1, a: 2], :a)
{1, [a: 2]}
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pop_lazy(keywords, key, fun)

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Specs

pop_lazy(t(), key(), (() -> value())) :: {value(), t()}

Lazily returns and removes all values associated with key in the keyword list.

This is useful if the default value is very expensive to calculate or generally difficult to setup and teardown again.

All duplicated keys are removed. See pop_first/3 for removing only the first entry.

Examples

iex> keyword = [a: 1]
iex> fun = fn ->
...>   # some expensive operation here
...>   13
...> end
iex> Keyword.pop_lazy(keyword, :a, fun)
{1, []}
iex> Keyword.pop_lazy(keyword, :b, fun)
{13, [a: 1]}
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put(keywords, key, value)

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Specs

put(t(), key(), value()) :: t()

Puts the given value under key.

If a previous value is already stored, all entries are removed and the value is overridden.

Examples

iex> Keyword.put([a: 1], :b, 2)
[b: 2, a: 1]
iex> Keyword.put([a: 1, b: 2], :a, 3)
[a: 3, b: 2]
iex> Keyword.put([a: 1, b: 2, a: 4], :a, 3)
[a: 3, b: 2]
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put_new(keywords, key, value)

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Specs

put_new(t(), key(), value()) :: t()

Puts the given value under key unless the entry key already exists.

Examples

iex> Keyword.put_new([a: 1], :b, 2)
[b: 2, a: 1]
iex> Keyword.put_new([a: 1, b: 2], :a, 3)
[a: 1, b: 2]
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put_new_lazy(keywords, key, fun)

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Specs

put_new_lazy(t(), key(), (() -> value())) :: t()

Evaluates fun and puts the result under key in keyword list unless key is already present.

This is useful if the value is very expensive to calculate or generally difficult to setup and teardown again.

Examples

iex> keyword = [a: 1]
iex> fun = fn ->
...>   # some expensive operation here
...>   3
...> end
iex> Keyword.put_new_lazy(keyword, :a, fun)
[a: 1]
iex> Keyword.put_new_lazy(keyword, :b, fun)
[b: 3, a: 1]
Link to this function

replace!(keywords, key, value)

View Source (since 1.5.0)

Specs

replace!(t(), key(), value()) :: t()

Alters the value stored under key to value, but only if the entry key already exists in keywords.

If key is not present in keywords, a KeyError exception is raised.

Examples

iex> Keyword.replace!([a: 1, b: 2, a: 4], :a, 3)
[a: 3, b: 2]

iex> Keyword.replace!([a: 1], :b, 2)
** (KeyError) key :b not found in: [a: 1]

Specs

split(t(), [key()]) :: {t(), t()}

Takes all entries corresponding to the given keys and extracts them into a separate keyword list.

Returns a tuple with the new list and the old list with removed keys.

Keys for which there are no entries in the keyword list are ignored.

Entries with duplicated keys end up in the same keyword list.

Examples

iex> Keyword.split([a: 1, b: 2, c: 3], [:a, :c, :e])
{[a: 1, c: 3], [b: 2]}
iex> Keyword.split([a: 1, b: 2, c: 3, a: 4], [:a, :c, :e])
{[a: 1, c: 3, a: 4], [b: 2]}

Specs

take(t(), [key()]) :: t()

Takes all entries corresponding to the given keys and returns them in a new keyword list.

Duplicated keys are preserved in the new keyword list.

Examples

iex> Keyword.take([a: 1, b: 2, c: 3], [:a, :c, :e])
[a: 1, c: 3]
iex> Keyword.take([a: 1, b: 2, c: 3, a: 5], [:a, :c, :e])
[a: 1, c: 3, a: 5]

Specs

to_list(t()) :: t()

Returns the keyword list itself.

Examples

iex> Keyword.to_list(a: 1)
[a: 1]
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update(keywords, key, initial, fun)

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Specs

update(t(), key(), value(), (value() -> value())) :: t()

Updates the key in keywords with the given function.

If the key does not exist, inserts the given initial value.

If there are duplicated keys, they are all removed and only the first one is updated.

Examples

iex> Keyword.update([a: 1], :a, 13, &(&1 * 2))
[a: 2]
iex> Keyword.update([a: 1, a: 2], :a, 13, &(&1 * 2))
[a: 2]
iex> Keyword.update([a: 1], :b, 11, &(&1 * 2))
[a: 1, b: 11]
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update!(keywords, key, fun)

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Specs

update!(t(), key(), (value() -> value())) :: t()

Updates the key with the given function.

If the key does not exist, raises KeyError.

If there are duplicated keys, they are all removed and only the first one is updated.

Examples

iex> Keyword.update!([a: 1], :a, &(&1 * 2))
[a: 2]
iex> Keyword.update!([a: 1, a: 2], :a, &(&1 * 2))
[a: 2]

iex> Keyword.update!([a: 1], :b, &(&1 * 2))
** (KeyError) key :b not found in: [a: 1]

Specs

values(t()) :: [value()]

Returns all values from the keyword list.

Values from duplicated keys will be kept in the final list of values.

Examples

iex> Keyword.values(a: 1, b: 2)
[1, 2]
iex> Keyword.values(a: 1, b: 2, a: 3)
[1, 2, 3]